Flexible Electronics News

Leading Solar Testing Agency Confirms New Energy’s Power Output for its SolarWindow

See-thru spray-on technology turns ordinary glass surfaces into electricity-generating SolarWindows, able to outperform rooftop solar by 300 percent

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By: DAVID SAVASTANO

Contributing Editor, Coatings World and Ink World

New Energy Technologies, Inc. announced that Florida Solar Energy Center (FSEC), a leading American certification and testing laboratory for solar products and equipment, has validated the company’s power production modeling calculations for its novel, SolarWindow technology.

SolarWindow is the first-of-its-kind see-thru glass window capable of generating electricity, and able to outperform conventional rooftop solar module installations by more than 300% when applied to the facades of commercial tall buildings and skyscrapers.

Engineers modeling a 40-story building, similar to Tampa’s landmark “100 North Tampa,” estimate annual cost-savings of $40,000 to $70,000 when installing New Energy’s SolarWindow to exposed window facades. In contrast, mounting today’s popular poly-crystalline silicon modules rack-mounted on the rooftop produces only $20,000 in energy savings per year.

“We have long anticipated that applying SolarWindow to exterior glass surfaces of commercial towers could generate energy savings several-fold greater than today’s rooftop solar systems,” explained John A. Conklin, president and CEO of New Energy Technologies, Inc. “It’s wonderful to have these power modeling calculations now validated by FSEC, a highly-respected independent solar testing agency.”

Following their review, FSEC engineers concluded that calculations in New Energy’s SolarWindow power output calculations model are “…reasonable and free of any significant errors.”

FSEC is renowned for solar testing, and has a long-standing history of certifying both solar hot water and photovoltaic (PV) modules. FSEC-certified PV modules include products by industry leaders such as: General Electric, Mitsubishi, Sanyo, Samsung, Sharp, BP Solar, DuPont Apollo, First Solar, and Suniva, Inc.

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